Dyson Spot + Scrub Ai: Great Mop, Weak Vacuum, $1,200

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- Dyson Spot + Scrub Ai uses a third‑party motor and brush system rather than a Dyson V10 motor, with Dyson technology limited to the cyclonic dock, roller mop, and AI stain‑detection.
- Dyson Spot + Scrub Ai delivers strong mopping performance and AI‑powered navigation (lidar + camera) that outperforms the earlier 360 Vis Nav, but its vacuum suction (18,000 Pa) and brush design are weaker than the Vis Nav, especially on high‑pile carpet.
- Dyson Spot + Scrub Ai includes a large, multifunction dock that empties the dustbin, cleans the mop, and refills water, featuring a clear Cyclonic dust canister and Dyson‑purple plastic, though the dock is bulky and noisy.
- Dyson Spot + Scrub Ai is physically large and loud, struggling to fit under some furniture and to cross thick rugs, and its brush tends to tangle hair after a few runs.
- Dyson Spot + Scrub Ai’s AI stain‑detection feature is inconsistent, often missing stains or avoiding paste‑like objects, with improvements promised via OTA updates later in the summer.
- Dyson Spot + Scrub Ai appears to be built on a Chinese ODM platform (likely Shenzhen Picea Robotics’ R2), sharing hardware with Anker Eufy Omni and iRobot 705 Combo Max, while retaining a few Dyson‑specific components.
Why it matters: Consumers paying $1,200 for Dyson’s flagship robot get upgraded mopping and AI navigation, but the weaker vacuum performance, noisy bulk, and limited carpet cleaning push them toward cheaper all‑rounders from Roborock or Ecovacs, challenging Dyson’s premium positioning in the high‑end robot‑vacuum market.




